People v. Madueno CA5 ( 2021 )


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  • Filed 12/21/21 P. v. Madueno CA5
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
    or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    THE PEOPLE,
    F079255
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    (Super. Ct. No. F16902078)
    v.
    BERNARDO MADUENO, JR.,                                                                   OPINION
    Defendant and Appellant.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Fresno County. Jonathan M.
    Skiles, Judge.
    Linnéa M. Johnson, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and
    Appellant.
    Xavier Becerra, Attorney General, Lance E. Winters, Chief Assistant Attorney
    General, Michael P. Farrell, Assistant Attorney General, Carlos A. Martinez and Caely E.
    Fallini, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
    -ooOoo-
    INTRODUCTION
    Defendant Bernardo Madueno, Jr., was charged with attempted premeditated
    murder of Jane Doe (Pen. Code,1 §§ 187, subd. (a), 664 [count 1]), assault upon Doe with
    a semiautomatic firearm (§ 245, subd. (b) [count 2]), willful infliction of corporal injury
    upon Doe, a cohabitant and the mother of his children (§ 273.5, subd. (a) [count 3]), and
    willful infliction of corporal injury upon Jane Doe 2, a child (§ 273d, subd. (a) [count 4]).
    The information further alleged: (1) as to counts 1 through 3, defendant personally
    inflicted great bodily injury under circumstances involving domestic violence (§ 12022.7,
    subd. (e)); (2) as to count 1, he personally and intentionally discharged a firearm and
    proximately caused great bodily injury (§ 12022.53, subd. (d)); and (3) as to counts 2
    and 3, he personally used a firearm (§ 12022.5, subd. (a)). Following trial, the jury
    convicted defendant of attempted murder on count 1, found him guilty as charged on
    counts 2 through 4, and found true the special allegations. He was sentenced to nine
    years plus 25 years to life for the firearm discharge enhancement on count 1, and 16
    months on count 4. Pursuant to section 654, the trial court stayed execution of
    punishment on counts 2 and 3.
    On appeal, defendant contends that “the trial court abused its discretion and
    violated [his] due process right to a fair trial when it excluded evidence of three incidents
    in which [Doe] demonstrated her character trait for aggression relevant to [his] defense of
    provocation and heat of passion.” (Capitalization omitted.) We reject defendant’s claim
    and uphold the judgment.
    STATEMENT OF FACTS
    On May 23, 2015, defendant shot Doe at least four times. She sustained wounds
    to the jaw, arm, chest, and back. At trial, the defense asserted that defendant had been
    provoked.
    1      Unless otherwise indicated, subsequent statutory citations refer to the Penal Code.
    2.
    I.    Prosecution’s case-in-chief
    a. Testimony of Doe
    Doe was 13 or 14 years of age when she gave birth to her eldest child Doe 2.
    While Doe 2 was approximately four or five months old, Doe began to date defendant.
    Even at the outset, defendant acted “really jealous” whenever Doe dressed in a certain
    way or socialized with other people. In 2000, when Doe was 15 years of age, she gave
    birth to her second child B.M. and moved in with defendant and his parents. Defendant
    is B.M.’s biological father. Six months before graduation, Doe dropped out of high
    school because she could no longer deal with defendant’s daily questions concerning her
    appearance (“did you put makeup on[?]”) and her interactions (“who did you talk to[?]”;
    “did anybody talk to you[?]”). Doe and defendant eventually moved out of defendant’s
    parents’ residence and cohabitated elsewhere in the San Jose area. In 2006, Doe gave
    birth to her third child A.M. Defendant is A.M.’s biological father.
    Doe and defendant relocated from San Jose to Los Banos, where Doe gave birth to
    her fourth child S.M. in 2008. Defendant is S.M.’s biological father. While living in Los
    Banos, defendant commuted to San Jose for his job. Sometimes, he arrived home “really
    late” because he would drink beer with his colleagues after work, resulting in arguments
    with Doe. Approximately one year after relocating, Doe and defendant returned to San
    Jose and moved back in with defendant’s parents for a few months. The two eldest
    children—Doe 2 and B.M.—initially attended public school, but defendant took them out
    when a staff member informed him that they “were running around with little boys.”
    Thereafter, Doe 2 and B.M. were homeschooled by Doe, who opposed their withdrawal
    because she did not believe that they had acted inappropriately. In 2010, Doe gave birth
    to her youngest child G.M. Defendant is G.M.’s biological father.
    Doe described her relationship with defendant as “constantly up and down” and
    “on and off” between 2000 and 2010. He “had his issues with drinking.” Although
    defendant occasionally sobered up whenever Doe threatened to leave him, he would
    3.
    inevitably “fall back.” Defendant controlled the finances and sometimes left home
    without giving Doe any money for the children’s upkeep. Due to his jealousy, he
    normally refused to let her go to the grocery store. On the rare occasions that Doe was
    allowed to do so, she would be inundated with questions about her interactions (“did
    anybody talk to you[?]”; “did you talk to anybody[?]”; “did any guys hit on you[?]”).
    At some point, Doe and defendant moved to Tracy, where they stayed for over a
    year. Defendant’s habit of “staying up all night drinking” “was the same.” Additionally,
    he frequently invited strangers over to the house to drink, which made Doe
    uncomfortable because the children were present. Doe and defendant subsequently left
    Tracy because A.M.—then five years of age—had been molested by one of defendant’s
    acquaintances. Doe blamed defendant for this incident.
    In 2014, Doe and defendant moved to Clovis, where the latter’s drinking “became
    very heavy again.” He also opposed her wish to go back to school and find a job. Doe
    told defendant that “[she] just really wasn’t happy in the relationship” and “wanted to
    separate.” Thereafter, he “changed” and became “more aggressive.” Defendant “started
    going through [Doe’s] phone,” “got into [her] face” a few times, and made menacing
    comments (“you’re not going to leave me, and if you think that’s going to happen, it’s
    not”; “if [I] can’t have [you] th[en] nobody can”; “if you ever think of leaving me, do you
    know how easy it is for me to do whatever I want and just go to Mexico[?]”). Doe started
    carrying a small pocketknife because “[the] arguments became so bad,” she “was scared,”
    and she “felt like . . . [defendant] could just snap on [her] any time.”
    On March 19, 2015, Doe and defendant had another argument. Defendant, who
    “became unglued way more easier,” walked away and “made it seem like he was going to
    go grab something.” Doe knew that firearms and knives were in the house and “thought
    he was going to hurt [her].” She phoned 911 but hung up when defendant reappeared.
    Doe did not realize that the call went through until police officers arrived. Defendant
    “grabbed [a] gun,” “tucked it in the back of his pants,” and ordered Doe to stay inside or
    4.
    else “he would shoot the police officers, and then he’d come back inside for [her].” He
    went outside and spoke to the officers, who “bought his story” and left after a few
    minutes.
    Sometime between March 19, 2015, and May 23, 2015, Doe and defendant “got
    into a really bad argument.” Consequently, Doe and Doe 2 left the residence. B.M.
    called Doe and urged her to come back because defendant threatened “to burn the house
    down” and “kill [Doe 2’s] cat.” After Doe returned, she and defendant quarreled again.
    When she tried to leave, he pinned her against the car. Doe was able to take out and
    unfold her pocketknife. Defendant “noticed that [she] was trying to get something,” “put
    his hands down,” and “sliced himself on his thumb” as “[her] hands [sic] was coming
    up.” Doe did not thrust or swing the blade. Defendant’s father, who was present, “ran
    out” and “took [defendant] off of [Doe].”
    On the evening of May 23, 2015, Doe was at home with her youngest children
    when defendant, Doe 2, and B.M. returned from a sports pub, where they had watched
    mixed martial arts fights aired on pay-per-view. Doe 2 “immediately just went straight to
    her room” and B.M. remarked, “[M]om, don’t ever let us go anywhere with him again by
    ourselves.” Doe asked B.M. what had happened. B.M. stated that she and Doe 2 needed
    to use the restroom. Defendant, who was drinking with other patrons, “had his back
    turned towards them” and did not respond when “they kept trying to tap him on the
    back.” When he “realized they were gone,” “he flipped out.” In addition, defendant
    yelled at a security guard and almost started a physical altercation.
    As B.M. was detailing the episode to Doe, defendant—who appeared
    intoxicated—“was getting really angry” and “yelling at [B.M.].” He then told Doe that
    he “thought [she] went and picked [the children] up” from the sports pub and “abandoned
    [him] there.” Defendant “got in [B.M.’s] face.” Doe, who “thought he was going to hit
    her,” “got between” the two and implored him to stop. Defendant punched a wall so hard
    that he created a hole, “slammed his head on the mantle,” and entered the kitchen “like he
    5.
    was going to go grab something or do something.” Frightened, Doe dialed 911. When
    she heard one of her children “yelling out that [defendant] had a gun,” she dropped the
    phone and “got out the front door as fast as [she] could” so that defendant would not
    shoot her in front of the children.
    Outside, as Doe was approaching the driveway, she “felt heat to [her] back” and
    knew that she had been struck with a bullet. She heard additional gunshots. Doe reached
    the middle of the street and flagged down a vehicle. When she turned around, defendant
    was “in [her] face.” Doe “grabbed him with both of [her] hands on his face” and “told
    him to stop because the [children] were watching.” She ultimately “blacked out.” Before
    losing consciousness, Doe observed defendant pointing his gun at and threatening the
    occupants of the vehicle that had stopped.
    b. Testimony of Doe 2
    On May 23, 2015, Doe 2—then 16 years of age—went to a sports bar with
    defendant and B.M. to watch mixed martial arts fights on television. While defendant
    was drinking beer and conversing with other patrons, the half-siblings went to the
    restroom together. They had “tried to let him know that [they] were going to go” but
    “couldn’t get his attention.” After Doe 2 and B.M. “opened the door to get out of the
    restroom,” they saw defendant “standing there” angrily. He scolded them for leaving
    without informing him. The three went back to their table, where defendant continued to
    lecture them. Later, defendant, Doe 2, and B.M. tried to leave the premises through an
    emergency exit but were stopped by a security guard and redirected to the main entrance.
    Defendant struck the guard in the head with a rolled-up poster. Doe 2 “had to push him
    away” and “started crying because that was embarrassing for [her].”
    After defendant, Doe 2, and B.M. returned home, Doe 2 “went straight to [her]
    room.” She overheard defendant, Doe, and B.M. arguing. When Doe 2 “heard one of
    [her] sisters scream,” she “got up to see what was going on.” She “saw [B.M.] running
    outside” and followed her. Doe 2 saw defendant “on all fours” over Doe in the street. He
    6.
    appeared to be choking her. Both Doe 2 and B.M. tried to get defendant off Doe, but to
    no avail. He eventually arose, drew closer to Doe 2, and “swung at [her] twice” with a
    closed fist, striking her mouth the second time. Before driving away from the scene,
    defendant told several onlookers to leave or else “he would kill them too.”
    At trial, Doe 2 testified that she had never witnessed Doe acting violent toward
    defendant.
    c. B.M.
    i. May 27, 2015 MDIC[2] interview
    On the evening of May 23, 2015, B.M. and Doe 2 went with defendant to a sports
    pub to “watch the fights.” However, after the two went to the bathroom, he “[got] mad
    because he said that [they] didn’t ask him.” When they were about to leave the building
    through an exit, a security guard informed them that they “ ‘ha[d] to go to the other
    side.’ ” Defendant ignored the guard and tried to pass, but the guard “kind of shoved
    [him].” Infuriated, defendant hit the guard in the head with a poster and said, “ ‘You
    wanna go? You wanna like “effing go?” ’ ”
    After the three came back home, B.M. tried to tell Doe about the pay-per-view, but
    defendant muttered, “ ‘You don’t even talk about the damn fights right now.’ ” He went
    outside and told Doe to accompany him. She obliged. When the pair returned, defendant
    was still angry. Doe advised him to “ ‘just forget it’ ” and “ ‘[not] let the kids go with
    [him] again.’ ” Defendant then complained about the security guard. Irritated, Doe
    replied, “ ‘Just go away already.’ ” Defendant went into the kitchen and punched a wall.
    He also “giggled” “really weird[ly].” Doe grabbed a phone and hurried outside.
    Defendant pulled a firearm out of his pocket and chased her. B.M. screamed, “ ‘He has a
    gun! He has a gun!’ ”
    2      Multi-Disciplinary Interview Center.
    7.
    B.M. followed defendant. At least three shots were fired. Doe, who was “still
    standing up” on the road, raised her right hand and told defendant to stop “ ‘because [of]
    the kids.’ ” He subsequently punched her so hard that she “spun” before landing on the
    ground. Defendant climbed on top of Doe and started choking her. B.M. believed Doe
    was already dead and tried to get defendant off of her. Doe 2 emerged from the house
    and also tried to get him off. Later, defendant stood up and asked a spectator, “ ‘You
    want to get shot too?’ ” He then approached Doe 2, punched her in the face, and drove
    away.
    ii. Trial testimony
    B.M.’s trial testimony varied from her MDIC interview in several respects. At the
    sports pub, defendant was concerned about B.M. and Doe 2 going to the bathroom
    without telling him because “there were a lot of drunk people” and “something could
    have happened to [them].” He did not raise his voice. On the way out of the
    establishment, defendant “tapped” a security guard’s head with a poster because he “was
    not letting [them] pass the gate.” He was “more frustrated” than angry. Once the three
    arrived at the house, B.M. went to her room to change clothes. When she came out, Doe
    and defendant were already “going back and forth” about what had occurred at the sports
    pub. B.M. had not discussed the incident with Doe. During the exchange, Doe was
    “petty” and “mouthy.” She told defendant that he “just let[] [the children] w[a]nder off”
    and “can’t even take care of them,” which exasperated him. Defendant “was not mad” at
    B.M. and never “g[o]t in [her] face.” Sometime thereafter, he hit his head against the
    wall. Doe “giggled” and “said she was going to call the police.” As she went outside
    with a phone, defendant took a gun out of his pocket and followed her. B.M. “screamed
    out that he had a gun” and exited the house. She saw defendant shooting at Doe. At
    some point, he climbed on top of Doe when she was on the ground. Afterward,
    defendant either slapped or punched Doe 2.
    8.
    B.M. testified that, in general, Doe instigated arguments while defendant
    deescalated them. While Doe was hospitalized following the shooting, she instructed
    B.M. to “cry” and “be more dramatic” during interviews with law enforcement to “make
    [defendant] look more bad.”
    d. Detective Mosher
    In the wake of the shooting, Detective Mosher of the Clovis Police Department
    attempted to track down defendant for several months. In late September 2016, he found
    out that defendant was in police custody in Yuma, Arizona. Shortly thereafter, defendant
    was extradited to Fresno.
    On October 17, 2016, Mosher interviewed defendant. After waiving his Miranda3
    rights, defendant recounted the events of May 23, 2015. That evening, an argument with
    Doe intensified when she “brandished a gun,” “grabbed a phone,” and “ran out of the
    house.” Defendant “chased her” and “took the gun from her.” As he “was trying to wipe
    his fingerprints off of it,” “it accidentally fired.” Defendant’s “mind went crazy” and he
    was “convinced that he was going to get in trouble” and “perhaps go to prison” for
    discharging the weapon. He “was angry at [Doe] because in his mind she got what she
    wanted.” Out of frustration, defendant fired the gun twice “toward the ground.” He
    could not recall punching Doe 2 in the face or threatening onlookers. Defendant fled to
    Las Vegas. There, he learned for the first time that Doe had been shot.
    II.    Defense’s case-in-chief
    a. Testimony of defendant
    Defendant and Doe started dating when he was 14 or 15 years old. They initially
    lived in San Jose, briefly moved to Los Banos, and then returned to San Jose for a two- or
    three-year period. During the second stint in San Jose, Doe “didn’t really get along with”
    members of defendant’s extended family and refused to attend gatherings. Defendant
    3      Miranda v. Arizona (1966) 
    384 U.S. 436
    .
    9.
    could not go by himself because Doe would threaten to leave him and take the children.
    Regarding Doe 2 and B.M.’s removal from public school, both defendant and Doe agreed
    to take them out because “their grades were not that good” and “they were probably
    hanging out with the wrong people.”
    Defendant and Doe moved to Tracy for a year. Defendant never invited strangers
    over “to drink or do anything else.” Once, his coworkers came to the house for a
    birthday party. On another occasion, defendant brought A.M. to a coworker’s residence
    so that they could look at roosters. At some point, while defendant was fixated on the
    animals, the coworker touched A.M.’s “private area.” Thereafter, whenever defendant
    and Doe would argue, she would “constantly” “bring up this incident” and “throw it in
    [his] face.”
    In 2014 or 2015, defendant and Doe moved to Clovis, where the relationship
    continued to deteriorate. He “wasn’t doing anything right in her eyes.” Their arguments
    occurred “a few times a week” and were “always loud.” Sometimes, Doe would “up and
    leave” for San Jose for a few days and not answer phone calls. During this time,
    defendant’s drinking worsened.
    About two weeks before the May 23, 2015 shooting, while defendant’s extended
    family was visiting, defendant went outside and saw Doe putting a bag in the car. She
    told him that she was “taking off again” and was “going to take the kids.” When
    defendant asked for the car keys, Doe swung a folding knife at him, cutting his thumb
    Defendant’s father, who had come out to check on him, witnessed the attack.
    Approximately five or six months after relocating to Clovis, defendant purchased a
    firearm for Doe, who wanted it because “she heard noises around the house” whenever he
    was absent. A few days before the May 23, 2015 shooting, in the middle of an argument,
    Doe cocked the gun and pointed it at defendant, her feet, her head, and defendant again.
    On the evening of May 23, 2015, defendant, Doe 2, and B.M. went to a sports pub
    to watch mixed martial arts fights on television. There, he drank alcohol “for about four
    10.
    hours.” At some point, defendant noticed that the children were gone and panicked. He
    searched the facility and eventually found Doe 2 and B.M., who claimed that they had
    used the restroom. Defendant told them to let him know about their whereabouts next
    time. He did not yell. Later, when the three tried to leave through a side exit, a security
    guard closed the door and said they “c[ould]n’t go through here.” Defendant “tapped”
    the guard’s head with a poster. At home, he spoke to Doe about “what had happened
    with the kids.” She accused him of “not being able to take care of [them].” Defendant
    remarked, “[W]hy is this such a big deal? I was just trying to take care of my kids.” Doe
    responded, “[Y]es, like the way you took care of [A.M.]” This statement angered
    defendant, who punched a hole in a wall and bumped his head “on the doorway.” He
    then saw Doe going out the front door with a gun and a phone. The next thing defendant
    recalled was “looking at the gun in the street,” “going towards [his] car,” and fleeing the
    scene. He did not remember shooting Doe, punching or choking Doe, punching Doe 2,
    or threatening bystanders.
    Defendant drove to Las Vegas, where he rested for “three and a half, four days.”
    He then learned from a cousin that Doe “was in the hospital” “from her being shot.”
    Alarmed, defendant went to Mexico, where he hid for “over a year.”
    b. Testimony of defendant’s father
    Two weeks before the May 23, 2015 shooting, defendant’s father was at defendant
    and Doe’s home in Clovis watching television when he heard a commotion outside. He
    exited the house and saw Doe yelling at defendant and swinging a knife. When
    defendant tried to confiscate the blade, he cut his finger.
    c. A.M.
    A.M. testified that—on the evening of May 23, 2015—defendant and Doe were
    fighting, defendant punched and hit his head against the wall, and Doe picked up a phone
    to call 911.
    11.
    The parties stipulated that A.M. participated in an MDIC interview when she was
    eight years old. She stated that Doe “usually starts the fights” and defendant “calms her
    down.” Immediately preceding the shooting, defendant “kind of changed after he hit his
    head.”
    d. S.M.
    S.M. testified that—on the evening of May 23, 2015—defendant and Doe were
    arguing and defendant hit his head against the wall.
    The parties stipulated that S.M. participated in an MDIC interview when she was
    six years old. She stated that—prior to the shooting—Doe had been “talking back” to
    defendant and asked him, “[W]hy don’t you take care of your kids[?]”
    DISCUSSION
    I.       Evidence of the victim’s character
    a. Background
    In an in limine motion, the prosecution requested a hearing pursuant to Evidence
    Code section 402 “on the foundation, relevancy and admissibility of any character
    evidence of defense witnesses.” (Boldface, capitalization & underlining omitted.) The
    request was granted.
    At the hearing, B.M. testified that she witnessed Doe acting violent toward
    defendant on multiple occasions. One time, “a few years” before the May 23, 2015
    shooting and before the family moved to Tracy, Doe lunged at defendant with a knife in
    the middle of a verbal altercation. He seized the weapon from her but “didn’t hit her, or
    slap her, or pull her hair, or choke her or nothing.” B.M. remembered that defendant
    “had blood on his stomach and his arm.” Another time, during a Thanksgiving gathering
    six or seven years earlier, a pregnant Doe flung a plate of hot food at defendant’s face.
    Finally, approximately two years before the shooting and when the family was living in
    Tracy, Doe punched walls and a mirror before striking defendant’s head repeatedly when
    he tried to placate her. Prior to the shooting, B.M. had never witnessed defendant acting
    12.
    violent toward Doe. The defense contended that Doe “was violent towards [defendant]”
    and the three aforementioned incidents “show[ed] a pattern of [her violent] behavior over
    time” that “create[d]” “a build up of emotions that led to [defendant’s] snap at the end.”
    Ultimately, the court decided to exclude the three incidents. It reasoned:
    “The issue, at least so far, had been three alleged prior instances of
    conduct; one involving throwing hot food on the defendant by the alleged
    victim and . . . another an allegation that the victim’s [sic] first punched the
    mirror cutting her hands and then punched the defendant multiple times in
    the head, and then the third would be an instan[ce] alleged that the alleged
    victim while in the kitchen charged at the defendant with the knife and
    actually inflicted at least some sort of injury that resulted in the bleeding in
    the abdomen area, I believe. All of those events occurred a significant
    period of time prior to the alleged shooting in this case. I believe the
    witness, my question to her was whether I was correct that the most recent
    one would be at least two years prior to the shooting and that was
    confirmed by the witness yesterday.
    “So first under [Evidence Code section] 1103, what we’re talking
    about is the victim’s alleged character trait for violence. As stated on the
    record yesterday this is not a self-defense claim. This will involve a claim
    of heat of passion and provocation. There has been no evidence so far that
    the defendant was provoked on this particular occasion by an act of
    violence by the victim. So the testimony so far, at least that the Court has
    been able to identify, would only, at least at this point, support an inference
    that the defendant was provoked by the victim’s alleged statements to the
    defendant that he did not take care of his children, that more specific[ally]
    came in through the witness [B.M.] yesterday, but the Court has allowed
    both sides to question witnesses regarding history of arguing and
    specifically the issue of prior abuse of one of the children and an allegation
    that the victim blamed the defendant. The only prior instance of violence
    that the Court has allowed either side to inquire into has been the incident
    several weeks prior to the shooting where the alleged victim testified to
    where she claimed she was trying to take out a knife to protect herself and
    the defendant allegedly was trying to grab that knife and cut this thumb.
    That was allowed in under [Evidence Code section] 1109. The Court has
    also been allowing the defense to reference that as far as provocation and
    heat of passion. [¶] . . . [¶]
    “Under a[n Evidence Code section] 352 analysis, the prior . . .
    violent conduct of the victim is disputed. The alleged victim is claiming
    13.
    that it didn’t happen and the defense is claiming that it did. Any alleged
    conduct other than the [Evidence Code section] 1109 evidence previously
    referenced would be multiple years old from the date of the shooting. The
    Court believes that would provide minimum probative value and relevance,
    and given what I already mentioned under [Evidence Code section] 1103, it
    would result in an undue consumption of time, and the Court also believes
    it would be highly prejudicial, since the Court believes that the alleged
    violent conduct of the victim is not actually at issue since that wasn’t . . .
    what would have provoked the defendant or resulted in an act of a heat of
    passion.”
    b. Analysis
    “Attempted murder requires the intent to kill and a direct but ineffectual act
    toward accomplishing the intended killing.” (People v. Juarez (2016) 
    62 Cal.4th 1164
    ,
    1170.) “Where a person intends to kill another person and makes an unsuccessful
    attempt to do so, his intention may be accompanied by any of the aggravating or
    mitigating circumstances which can accompany the completed crimes. In other words,
    the intent to kill may have been formed after premeditation or deliberation, it may have
    been formed upon a sudden explosion of violence, or it may have been brought about by
    a heat of passion or an unreasonable but good faith belief in the necessity of self-
    defense.” (People v. Van Ronk (1985) 
    171 Cal.App.3d 818
    , 824; see CALCRIM No. 603
    [“An attempted killing that would otherwise be attempted murder is reduced to attempted
    voluntary manslaughter if the defendant attempted to kill someone because of a sudden
    quarrel or in the heat of passion.”].)
    “The provocation which incites the defendant to homicidal conduct in the heat of
    passion must be caused by the victim [citation], or be conduct reasonably believed by the
    defendant to have been engaged in by the victim. [Citations.] The provocative conduct
    by the victim may be physical or verbal, but the conduct must be sufficiently provocative
    that it would cause an ordinary person of average disposition to act rashly or without due
    deliberation and reflection. [Citations.]” (People v. Lee (1999) 
    20 Cal.4th 47
    , 59.)
    “ ‘[N]o defendant may set up his own standard of conduct and justify or excuse himself
    14.
    because in fact his passions were aroused, unless . . . the jury believe[s] that the facts and
    circumstances were sufficient to arouse the passions of the ordinarily reasonable man.’
    [Citation.]” (People v. Steele (2002) 
    27 Cal.4th 1230
    , 1252-1253.) “ ‘ “[N]o specific
    type of provocation [is] required . . . .” ’ [Citation.] Moreover, the passion aroused need
    not be anger or rage, but can be any ‘ “ ‘[v]iolent, intense, high-wrought or enthusiastic
    emotion’ ” ’ [citation] other than revenge [citation]. ‘However, if sufficient time has
    elapsed between the provocation and the fatal blow for passion to subside and reason to
    return, the [attempted] killing is not [attempted] voluntary manslaughter . . . .’
    [Citation.]” (People v. Breverman (1998) 
    19 Cal.4th 142
    , 163; see People v. Gingell
    (1931) 
    211 Cal. 532
    , 545 [“[T]he ‘cooling time’ to be considered [i]s the time within
    which an ordinarily reasonable man would cool under like circumstances.”].)
    “Evidence Code section 1101, subdivision (a) provides that ‘evidence of a
    person’s character or a trait of his or her character . . . is inadmissible when offered to
    prove his or her conduct on a specified occasion.’ Evidence Code section 1103,
    subdivision (a)(1) provides an exception to Evidence Code section 1101, subdivision (a)
    when a defendant offers evidence regarding the character or trait of a victim ‘to prove
    conduct of the victim in conformity with the character or trait of character.’ Of course,
    the trial court may exclude otherwise admissible evidence pursuant to Evidence Code
    section 352 if admitting the evidence would have confused the issues at trial, unduly
    consumed time, or been more prejudicial than probative. [Citations.] The trial court
    must always perform its gatekeeping function pursuant to Evidence Code section 350 to
    exclude evidence that is irrelevant.” (People v. Gutierrez (2009) 
    45 Cal.4th 789
    , 827-
    828.) “ ‘A trial court’s exercise of discretion in admitting or excluding evidence is
    reviewable for abuse [citation] and will not be disturbed except on a showing the trial
    court exercised its discretion in an arbitrary, capricious, or patently absurd manner that
    resulted in a manifest miscarriage of justice [citation].” (People v. Rodriguez (1999) 
    20 Cal.4th 1
    , 9-10.)
    15.
    Here, the defense argued that the shooting transpired because defendant had been
    provoked by Doe’s violent behavior and sought to admit three prior incidents to prove
    that her conduct was “in conformity with” her aggressive character. (Evid. Code, § 1101,
    subd. (a).) However, the record does not support that Doe was violent and/or aggressive
    on the night in question. At most, testimonies in favor of the defense showed that she
    chided defendant for not properly supervising Doe 2 and B.M. at the sports pub and
    reminded him about A.M.’s molestation that occurred under his watch. (Cf. People v.
    Hoyos (2007) 
    41 Cal.4th 872
    , 913 [“[E]ven if the murder victim were the most violent
    person in the world, that fact would not be relevant if the evidence made it clear that the
    victim was taken by surprise and shot in the back of the head.”], overruled on other
    grounds by People v. Black (2014) 
    58 Cal.4th 912
    , 919-920.) Therefore, the court
    properly exercised its discretion to exclude evidence pertaining to Doe’s alleged
    propensity for violence and we will not disturb its ruling.
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed.
    DETJEN, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    HILL, P. J.
    POOCHIGIAN, J.
    16.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: F079255

Filed Date: 12/21/2021

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 12/21/2021